FOR PRIVATE DISTRIBUTION.1

_____________

THE following pages contain Extracts from LETTERS addressed
to Professor HENSLOW2 by C. DARWIN, Esq. They are printed for distribution
among the Members of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, in consequence
of the interest which has been excited by some of the Geological notices
which they contain, and which were read at a Meeting of the Society on the
16th of November 1835.

The opinions here expressed must be viewed in no other light
than as the first thoughts which occur to a traveller respecting what he
sees, before he has had time to collate his Notes, and examine his Collections,
with the attention necessary for scientific accuracy.

CAMBRIDGE,

Dec. 1, 1835.

A

1These letters were read, without Darwin's knowledge, at a meeting of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 16 November 1835, with the president, Rev. Dr William Clark, in the chair. The minutes record:

Extracts were read of letters from C. Darwin Esq. of Christ's College containing accounts of the Geology of certain parts of the Andes and S. America. Observations by Prof. Sedgwick and Henslow.

The first item of the minutes of the next meeting of Council on 30 November 1835 reads:

Entomological extracts from this pamphlet were published in: Extracts of letters from C. Darwin, Esq., to Professor Henslow. Printed for private distribution. Entomological Magazine 3 (5) Art. XLIII (1836): 457-460. The letters were later communicated by Sedgwick to the Geological Society of London on 18 November 1835 and published as Darwin 1836. Further extracts were reprinted in a review in the Magazine of natural history 9, 64 (1836): 441-5 making it possibly the first review of Darwin's writings. See Correspondence vol. 1.

2 John Stevens Henslow (1796-1861), Cambridge clergyman, botanist and mineralogist. He became Darwin's scientific mentor when at Cambridge and received and preserved Darwin's Beagle specimens during the voyage.

EXTRACTS,

&c.

____________

RIO DE JANEIRO, May 18, 1832.

WE started from Plymouth on the 27th December 1831—At St Jago1 (Cape
de Verd Islands) we spent three weeks. The geology was pre-eminently interesting,
and I believe quite new: there are some facts on a large scale, of upraised
coast that would interest Mr. Lyell.2 . . . . . . . . .

On the coast I collected many marine animals, chiefly gasteropodous mollusca
(I think some new). I examined pretty accurately a Caryophyllia,3 and, if
my eyes were not bewitched, former descriptions have

A2

1 Today Sao Tiago in the Cape Verde Islands.

2 Charles Lyell (1797-1875), Scottish geologist and later friend of Darwin's. His work was perhaps more influential for Darwin than any other single writer.

not the slightest resemblance to the animal. I took several specimens of
an Octopus, which possessed a most marvellous power of changing its colours;
equalling any chamelion, and evidently accommodating the changes to the
colour of the ground which it passed over. . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

We then sailed for Bahia, and touched at the rock of St Paul. This is a
serpentine formation. . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

After touching at the Abrothos,1 we arrived here on April 4th.. . . . .
. . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

A few days after arriving, I started on an expedition of one hundred and
fifty miles to Rio Macao,2 which lasted eighteen days. . . . . . . . . .
.

. . . . . . . . . .

I am now collecting fresh water and land animals: if what was told me in
London is true, viz. that there are no small insects in the collections
from the Tropics, I tell entomologists to look out and have their pens ready
for describing. I have taken as minute (if not more so) as in England, Hydorpori,
Hygroti, Hydrobii, Pselaphi, Staphylini, Curculiones, Bembidia, &c.
&c. It is exceedingly interesting to observe the difference of genera
and species from those which I know; it is however much less than I had
expected. . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

1 Misprint for Abrolhos archipelago, rocky islands off the coast of Brazil, north of Rio de Janeiro.

I have just returned from a walk, and as a specimen how little the insects
are known, Noterus, according to Dic. Class.1 consists solely of three European
species. I, in one haul of my net, took five distinct species. . . . . .
. . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

At Bahia, the pegmatite and gneiss in beds had the same direction as was
observed by Humboldt to prevail over Columbia, distant thirteen hundred
miles.

I made an enormous collection of Arachnidæ at Rio. Also a good many
small beetles in pill-boxes: but it is not the best time of year for the
latter. . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

Amongst the lower animals, nothing has so much interested me as finding
two species of elegantly coloured planariæ (?) inhabiting the dry
forest! The false relation they bear to snails is the most extraordinary
thing of the kind I have ever seen. In the same genus (or more truly, family)
some of the marine species possess an organization so mar-

vellous, that I can scarcely credit my eyesight. Every one has heard
of the discoloured streaks of water in the equatorial regions. One I examined
was owing to the presence of such minute Oscillatoria,1 that in each square
inch of surface there must have been at least one hundred thousand present.
. . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

I might collect a far greater number of specimens of invertebrate animals
if I took up less time over each: but I have come to the conclusion, that
two animals with their original colour and shape noted down, will be more
valuable to naturalists than six with only dates and place. . . . . . .
. . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

At this present minute we are at anchor in the mouth of the river: and
such a strange scene it is. Every thing is in flames—the sky with
lightning—the water with luminous particles—and even the very
masts are pointed with a blue flame.

_______________

MONTE VIDEO, Nov. 24, 1832.

WE arrived here on the 24th of October, after our first cruize on the coast
of Patagonia, north of the Rio Negro. . . . . . . . . . .

I had hoped for the credit of dame Nature, no such country as this last
existed; in sad reality we coasted along two hundred and forty miles of
sand hillocks; I never knew before, what a horrid ugly object a sand hillock
is: the famed country of the Rio Plata in my opinion is not much better;
an enormous brackish river bounded by an interminable green plain is enough
to make any naturalist groan.

. . . . . . . . . .

I have been very lucky with fossil bones; I have fragments of at least
six distinct animals; as many of these are teeth, shattered and rolled as
they have been, I trust they will be recognized. I have paid all the attention
I am capable of, to their geological site; but of course it is too long
a story for a letter. 1st. the tarsi and meta-tarsi, very perfect, of a
cavia;1 2d. the upper jaw and head of some very large animal, with four square
hollow molars, and the head greatly produced in front. I at first thought
it belonged either to the megalonyx or megatherium.2 In confirmation of this,
in the same formation, I found a large surface of the osseous polygonal
plates, which "late observations" (what are they?) have shewn
to belong to the megatherium. Immediately I saw them I thought they must
belong to an enormous armadillo, living species of which genus are so abundant
here. 3d. The lower jaw of some large animal, which, from the molar teeth
I should think belonged to the edentata;3 4th. large molar teeth, which in
some

1 The genus of South American rodents which includes guinea pigs.

2 Two species of extinct giant ground sloths.

3 An order of placental mammals that includes anteaters, armadillos and sloths.

respects would seem to belong to some enormous species of rodentia; 5th.
also some smaller teeth belonging to the same order, &c. &c.—They
are mingled with marine shells, which appear to me identical with existing
species. But since they were deposited in their beds, several geological
changes have taken place in the country. . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

There is a poor specimen of a bird, which to my unornithological eyes,
appears to be a happy mixture of a lark, pigeon, and snipe. Mr Mac Leay1 himself never imagined such an inosculating creature.

. . . . . . . . . .

I have taken some interesting amphibia; a fine bipes;2 a new Trigonocephalus,3 in its habits beautifully connecting Crotalus4 and Viperus:5 and plenty of
new (as far as my knowledge goes) saurians. As for one little toad, I hope
it may be new, that it may be christened "diabolicus." Milton
must allude to this very individual, when he talks of "squat like a
toad."6

. . . . . . . . . .

Amongst the pelagic crustaceæ, some new and curious genera. Among
Zoophites some interesting animals. As for one Flustra,7 if I had not the
specimen to back me, nobody would believe in its most anomalous structure.
But as for novelty, all this is nothing to a family of pelagic animals,
which at first sight appear like Medusa, but are really highly organized.

1 William Sharp Macleay (1792-1865), naturalist and diplomat who devised the quinary system of classification. Macleay 1819-1821.

2 A kind of subterranean lizard possessing only front legs.

3 Venomous snakes, including copperheads and water moccasins.

4 Rattlesnakes.

5 Old World venomous snakes.

6 John Milton (1608-1674), poet. Paradise lost 4. 799-800. CD recalled in his Autobiography (p. 85): 'Formerly Milton's Paradise Lost had been my chief favourite, and in my excursions during the voyage of the Beagle, when I could take only a single small volume, I always chose Milton.'

I have examined them repeatedly, and certainly from their structure it
would be impossible to place them in any existing order. Perhaps Salpa1 is
the nearest animal; although the transparency of the body is almost the
only character they have in common.. . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

We have been at Buenos Ayres for a week. It is a fine large city; but such
a country; every thing is mud; you can go no where, you can do nothing for
mud. In the city I obtained much information about the banks of the Uruguay.
I hear of limestone with shells, and beds of shells in every direction.

. . . . . . . . . .

I purchased fragments of some enormous bones, which I was assured belonged
to the former giants!!

_________________

April 11, 1833.

WE are now running up from the Falkland Islands to the Rio Negro (or Colorado.).
. . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

It is now some months since we have been at a civilized port; nearly all
this time has been spent in the most southern part of Tierra del Fuego.
It is a detestable place; gales succeed gales at such short intervals, that
it is difficult to do any thing. We were twenty-three days off Cape Horn,
and could

by no means get to the westward.—We at last ran into harbour, and
in the boats got to the west of the inland channels.—With two boats
we went about three hundred miles; and thus I had an excellent opportunity
of geologizing and seeing much of the savages. The Fuegians are in a more
miserable state of barbarism than I had expected ever to have seen a human
being. In this inclement country they are absolutely naked, and their temporary
houses are like those which children make in summer with boughs of trees..
. . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

The climate in some respects is a curious mixture of severity and mildness;
as far as regards the animal kingdom the former character prevails; I have
in consequence not added much to my collections. The geology of this part
of Tierra del Fuego was to me very interesting. The country is non-fossiliferous,
and a common-place succession of granitic rocks and slates: attempting to
make out the relation of cleavage, strata, &c. &c. was my chief
amusement.. . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

The Southern ocean is nearly as sterile as the continent it washes. Crustaceæ
have afforded me most work.

. . . . . . . . . .

I found a Zoea,1 of most curious form, its body being only one-sixth the
length of the two spears. I am convinced, from its structure and other reasons,
it is

a young Erichthus.1 I must mention part of the structure of a Decapod,
it is so very anomalous: the last pair of legs are small and dorsal, but
instead of being terminated by a claw, as in all others, it has three curved
bristle-like appendages; these are finely serrated and furnished with cups,
somewhat resembling those of the Cephalopods. The animal being pelagic,
this beautiful structure enables it to hold on to light floating objects.
I have found out something about the propagation of that ambiguous tribe
the Corallines.. . . . . . . . . .

I had here the high good fortune to find amongst the most primitive looking
rocks, a bed of micaceous sandstone, abounding with Terebratula2 and its
sub-genera, and Entrochites.3 As this is so remote a locality from Europe,
I think the comparison of these impressions with those of the oldest fossiliferous
rocks of Europe will be pre-eminently interesting. Of course they are only
models and casts; but many of them are very perfect.

________________

RIO DE LA PLATA, July 18, 1833.

THE greater part of the winter has been passed in this river at Meldonado..
. . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

1 A mantis shrimp of the order Stomatopoda.

2 A genus of brachiopods which includes many fossil and some living species.

We have got almost every bird in this neighbourhood, (Meldonado) about
eighty in number, and nearly twenty quadrupeds.. . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

In a few days we go to the Rio Negro to survey some banks.. . . . . . .
. . .

. . . . . . . . . .

The geology must be very interesting. It is near the junction of the Megatherium
and Patagonian cliffs. From what I saw of the latter, in one half hour,
in St Joseph's bay, they would be well worth a long examination. Above the
great oyster-bed there is one of gravel, which fills up inequalities in
its interior; and above this, and therefore high out of the water, is one
of such modern shells that they retain their colour and emit a bad smell
when burnt. Patagonia must clearly have lately risen from the water.

________________

MONTE VIDEO, November 12, 1833.

I LEFT the Beagle at the Rio Negro, and crossed by land to Buenos Ayres.
There is now carrying on a bloody war of extermination against the Indians,
by which I was able to make this passage. But at the best it is sufficiently
dangerous, and till now very rarely travelled. It is the most wild, dreary
plain imaginable, without settled inhabitant or head of

cattle. There are military "postas" at wide intervals, by which
means I travelled. We lived for many days on deer and ostriches, and had
to sleep in the open camp.. . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

I had the satisfaction of ascending the Tierra de la Ventana, a chain of
mountains between three and four thousand feet high, the very existence
of which is scarcely known beyond the Rio Plata. After resting a week at
Buenos Ayres, I started for St Fé. On the road the geology was interesting.
I found two great groups of immense bones, but so very soft as to render
it impossible to remove them. I think, from a fragment of one of the teeth,
they belonged to the Mastodon. In the Rio Carcarana, I got a tooth which
puzzles even my conjectures. It looks like an enormous gnawing one. At St
Fé, not being well, I embarked and had a fine sail of three hundred
miles down that princely river the Parana. When I returned to Buenos Ayres,
I found the country upside down with revolutions, which caused me much trouble.
I at last got away and joined the Beagle.

________________

E. FALKLAND ISLAND, March, 1834.

I HAVE been alarmed by your expression "cleaning all the bones,"
as I am afraid the printed numbers will be lost: the reason I am so anxious
they should

not be, is, that a part were found in a gravel with recent shells, but
others in a very different bed. Now with these latter there were bones of
an Agouti,1 a genus of animals, I believe, peculiar to America, and it would
be curious to prove that some one of the same genus coexisted with the megatherium;
such, and many other points entirely depend on the numbers being carefully
preserved.. . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

I collected all the plants which were in flower on the coast of Patagonia,
at Port Desire, and St Julian; also on the eastern parts of Tierra del Fuego,
where the climate and features of Tierra del Fuego and Patagonia are united..
. . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

The soil of Patagonia is very dry, gravelly, and light. In East Tierra,
it is gravelly, peaty, and damp. Since leaving the Rio Plata I have had
some opportunities of examining the great southern Patagonian formation.
I have a good many shells; from the little I know of the subject, it must
be a tertiary formation, for some of the shells (and corallines) now exist
in the sea. Others, I believe, do not. This bed, which is chiefly characterized
by a great oyster, is covered by a very curious bed of porphyry pebbles,
which I have traced for more than seven hundred miles. But the most curious
fact is, that the whole of the east coast of the southern part of South
America has been elevated from the ocean, since a period during which

muscles have not lost their blue colour. At Port St Julian I found some
very perfect bones of some large animal, I fancy a Mastodon: the bones of
one hind extremity are very perfect and solid. This is interesting, as the
latitude is between 49° and 50°, and the site far removed from the
great Pampas, where bones of the narrow toothed Mastodon are so frequently
found. By the way this Mastodon and the Megatherium, I have no doubt, were
fellow brethren in the ancient plains. Relics of the Megatherium I have
found at a distance of nearly six hundred miles in a north and south line.
In Tierra del Fuego I have been interested in finding some sort of ammonite
(also I believe found by Capt. King1) in the slate near Port Famine; and
on the eastern coast there are some curious alluvial plains, by which the
existence of certain quadrupeds in the islands can clearly be accounted
for. There is a sandstone with the impression of leaves like the common
beech tree; also modern shells, &c., and on the surface of the table
land there are, as usual, muscles with their blue colour, &c.. . . .
. . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

I have chiefly been employed in preparing myself for the South Sea, and
examining the polypi of the smaller corallines in these latitudes. Many
in themselves are very curious, and I think undescribed: there was one appalling
one, allied to a Flustra, which I dare say I mentioned having found to the
northward, where

1 Phillip Parker King (1793-1856), commander of the Adventure, accompanying the Beagle, on the first surveying expedition to South America, 1826-1830, and author of Narrative 1.

the cells have a moveable organ (like a vulture's head, with a dilatable
beak), fixed on the edge. But what is of more general interest, is the unquestionable
(as it appears to me) existence of another species of ostrich besides the
Struthio ostrea. All the Gauchos and Indians state it is the case: and I
place the greatest faith in their observations. I have the head, neck, and
piece of skin, feathers, and legs of one. The differences are chiefly in
the colour of the feathers and scales; in the legs being feathered below
the knees; also in its modification, and geographical distribution.

________________

VALPARAISO, July 24, 1834.

AFTER leaving the Falklands, we proceeded to the Rio Santa Cruz; followed
up the river till within twenty miles of the Cordilleras: unfortunately
want of provisions compelled us to return. This expedition was most important
to me, as it was a transverse section of the great Patagonian formation.
I conjecture (an accurate examination of the fossils may possibly determine
the point) that the main bed is somewhere about the meiocene period (using
Mr Lyell's expression); judging from what I have seen of the present shells
of Patagonia. This bed contains an enormous mass of lava. This is of some

interest, as being a rude approximation to the age of the volcanic part
of the great range of the Andes. Long before this it existed as a slate
and porphyritic line of hills. I have collected a tolerable quantity of
information respecting the various periods and forms of elevations of these
plains. I think these will be interesting to Mr Lyell. I had deferred reading
his third volume till my return; you may guess how much pleasure it gave
me; some of his wood-cuts came so exactly into play, that I have only to
refer to them, instead of redrawing similar ones.. . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

The valley of Santa Cruz appears to me a very curious one; at first it
quite baffled me. I believe I can shew good reasons for supposing it to
have been once a northern strait, like that of Magellan.. . . . . . . .
. .

. . . . . . . . . .

In Tierra del Fuego I collected and examined some corallines: I have observed
one fact which quite startled me. It is, that in the genus Sertularia1 (taken
in its most restricted form as by Lamouroux2), and in two species which,
excluding comparative expressions, I should find much difficulty in describing
as different, the polypi quite and essentially differed in all their most
important and evident parts of structure. I have already seen enough to
be convinced that the present families of corallines, as arranged by Lamarck,
Cuvier, &c. are highly artificial. It appears to me, that they are in
the same

state in which shells were, when Linnæus left them for Cuvier to
re-arrange.. . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

It is most extraordinary I can no where see in my books a single description
of the polypus of any one coral (excepting Lobularia (Alcyonium) of Savigny).1 I found a curious little stony Cellaria (a new genus), each cell provided
with a long toothed bristle capable of various and rapid motions. This motion
is often simultaneous, and can be produced by irritation. This fact, as
far as I see, is quite isolated in the history (excepting of the Flustra,
with an organ like a vulture's head) of Zoophites. It points out a much
more intimate relation between the polypi, than Lamarck is willing to allow.
I forget whether I mentioned having seen something of the manner of propagation
in that most ambiguous family, the corallines: I feel pretty well convinced
that if they are not plants, they are not Zoophites: the "gemmule"
of a Halimeda contains several articulations united, ready to burst their
envelope and become attached to some basis. I believe that in Zoophites
universally, the gemmule produces a single polypus, which afterwards or
at the same time grows with its cell, or single articulation. The Beagle
left the strait of Magellan in the middle of winter: she found her road
out by a wild unfrequented channel; well might Sir J. Nasborough2 call the
west coast South Desolation, "because it is so desolate a land

to behold." We were driven into Chiloe, by some very bad weather.
An Englishman gave me three specimens of that very fine lucanoidal insect,1 which is described in the Cambridge Philosophical Transactions,2 two males
and one female. I find Chiloe is composed of lava and recent deposits. The
lavas are curious, from abounding with or rather being composed of pitchstone..
. . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

We arrived here the day before yesterday; the views of the distant mountains
are most sublime and the climate delightful: after our long cruise in the
damp gloomy climates of the South, to breathe a clear dry air, and feel
honest warm sunshine, and eat good fresh roast beef, must be the summum
bonum of human life. I do not like the looks of the rocks half so much as
the beef, there is too much of those rather insipid ingredients, mica, quartz,
and feldspar.. . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

Shortly after arriving here I set out on a geological excursion, and had
a very pleasant ramble about the base of the Andes. The whole country appears
composed of breccias, (and I imagine slates) which universally have been
modified, and often completely altered by the action of fire; the varieties
of porphyry thus produced are endless, but no where have I yet met with
rocks which have flowed in a stream; dykes of greenstone are very numerous.
Modern volcanic action is entirely shut up in the

very central parts (which cannot now be reached on account of the snow)
of the Cordilleras. To the south of the Rio Maypo, I examined the tertiary
plains already partially described by M. Gay.1 The fossil shells appear to
me to differ more widely from the recent ones, then in the great Patagonian
formation; it will be curious if an eocene and meiocene formation (recent
there is abundance of) could be proved to exist in South America as well
as in Europe. I have been much interested by finding abundance of recent
shells at an elevation of thirteen hundred feet; the country in many places
is scattered over with shells, but these are all littoral ones!
So that I suppose the thirteen hundred feet elevation must be owing to a
succession of small elevations, such as in 1822. With these certain proofs
of the recent residence of the ocean over all the lower parts of Chili,
the outline of every view and the form of each valley possesses a high interest.
Has the action of running water or the sea formed this ravine? was a question
which often arose in my mind, and was generally answered by my finding a
bed of recent shells at the bottom. I have not sufficient arguments, but
I do not believe that more than a small fraction of the height of the Andes
has been formed within the tertiary period.

__________

1 Claude Gay (1800-73), French naturalist and traveller. Professor of physics and chemistry in Santiago, 1828-1842. See Brongniart 1833.

WE are now lying becalmed off Valparaiso, and I will take the opportunity
of writing a few lines to you. The termination of our voyage is at last
decided on. We leave the coast of America in the beginning of September,
and hope to reach England in the same month of 1836. . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

You will have heard an account of the dreadful earthquake of the 20th of
February. I wish some of the geologists, who think the earthquakes of these
times are trifling, could see the way in which the solid rock is shivered.
In the town there is not one house habitable; the ruins remind me of the
drawings of the desolated eastern cities. We were at Valdivia at the time,
and felt the shock very severely. The sensation was like that of skating
over very thin ice; that is, distinct undulations were perceptible. The
whole scene of Concepcion and Talcuana is one of the most interesting spectacles
we have beheld since leaving England. Since leaving Valparaiso, during this
cruise, I have done little excepting in geology. In the modern tertiary
strata I have examined four bands of disturbance, which reminded me on a
small scale of the famous tract in the Isle of Wight. In one spot there
were beautiful examples of three different forms of upheaval. In two cases
I think I can show that the inclination is owing to the presence

of a system of parallel dykes traversing the inferior mica slate. The
whole of the coast from Chiloe to the south extreme of the Peninsula of
Tres Montes is composed of the latter rock; it is traversed by very numerous
dykes, the mineralogical nature of which will, I suspect, turn out very
curious. I examined one grand transverse chain of granite, which has clearly
burst up through the overlying slate. At the Peninsula of Tres Montes there
has been an old volcanic focus, which corresponds to another in the north
part of Chiloe. I was much pleased at Chiloe by finding a thick bed of recent
oyster-shells, &c. capping the tertiary plain, out of which grew large
forest trees. I can now prove that both sides of the Andes have risen in
this recent period to a considerable height. Here the shells were three
hundred and fifty feet above the sea. In Zoology I have done but very little;
excepting a large collection of minute diptera and hymenoptera from Chiloe.
I took in one day, Pselaphus, Anaspis, Latridius, Leiodes, Cercyon, and
Elmis, and two beautiful true Carabi; I might have fancied myself collecting
in England. A new and pretty genus of nudibranch mollusca which cannot crawl
on a flat surface, and a genus in the family of balanidæ,1 which has
not a true case, but lives in minute cavities in the shells of the concholepas,2 are nearly the only two novelties.

I HAVE just returned from Mendoza, having crossed the Cordilleras by two
passes. This trip has added much to my knowledge of the geology of the country.
. . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

I will give a very short sketch of the structure of these huge mountains.
In the Portillo pass (the more southern one) travellers have described the
Cordilleras to consist of a double chain of nearly equal altitude, separated
by a considerable interval. This is the case: and the same structure extends
northward to Uspellata.1 The little elevation of the eastern line (here not
more than six thousand or seven thousand feet) has caused it almost to be
overlooked. To begin with the western and principal chain, where the sections
are best seen; we have an enormous mass of a porphyritic conglomerate resting
on granite. This latter rock seems to form the nucleus of the whole mass,
and is seen in the deep lateral valleys, injected amongst, upheaving, overturning
in the most extraordinary manner, the overlying strata. On the bare sides
of the mountains, the complicated dykes and wedges of variously coloured
rocks, are seen traversing in every possible form and shape the same formations,
which, by their intersections, prove a succession of violences. The stratification
in all the mountains is beautifully distinct, and owing to a variety in
their colouring, can be seen at great

distances. I cannot imagine any part of the world presenting a more extraordinary
scene of the breaking up of the crust of the globe, than these central peaks
of the Andes. The upheaval has taken place by a great number of (nearly)
north and south lines*; which in most cases has formed as many anticlinal
and synclinal ravines. The strata in the highest pinnacles are almost universally
inclined at an angle from 70° to 80°. I cannot tell you how much
I enjoyed some of these views; it is worth coming from England, once to
feel such intense delight. At an elevation of from ten to twelve thousand
feet, there is a transparency in the air, and a confusion of distances,
and a sort of stillness, which give the sensation of being in another world;
and when to this is joined the picture so plainly drawn of the great epochs
of violence, it causes in the mind a most strange assemblage of ideas. The
formation which I call porphyritic conglomerates, is the most important
and most developed in Chili. From a great number of sections, I find it
to be a true coarse conglomerate or breccia, which passes by every step,
in slow gradation, into a fine clay-stone porphyry; the pebbles and cement
becoming porphyritic, till at last all is blended in one compact rock. The
porphyries are excessively abundant in this chain, and I feel sure that
at least four-fifths of them have been thus

produced from sedimentary beds in situ. There are also porphyries which
have been injected from below amongst the strata, and others ejected which
have flowed in streams: and I could shew specimens of this rock, produced
in these three methods, which cannot be distinguished. It is a great mistake
to consider the Cordilleras (here) as composed only of rocks which have
flowed in streams. In this range I nowhere saw a fragment which I believe
to have thus originated, although the road passes at no great distance from
the active volcanos. The porphyries, conglomerates, sandstone, quartzone-sandstone,
and limestones alternate and pass into each other many times (overlying
clay-slate, when not broken through by the granite.) In the upper parts
the sandstone begins to alternate with gypsum, till at last we have this
substance of a stupendous thickness. I really think the formation is in
some places (it varies much) nearly two thousand feet thick. It occurs often
with a green (Epidote?) siliceous sandstone and snow-white marble: and resembles
that found in the Alps, from containing large concretions of a crystalline
marble of a blackish-gray colour. The upper beds, which form some of the
higher pinnacles, consist of layers of snow-white gypsum and red compact
sandstone, from the thickness of paper to a few feet, alternating in an
endless round. The rock has a most curiously painted appearance. At the
pass of the Puquenas1 in this formation, where a black rock (like clay-slate,

1 Peuquenes range, the Western range of the Cordillera mountains between Chile and Argentina.

without many laminæ) and pale limestone have replaced the red sandstone,
I found abundant impressions of shells. The elevation must be between twelve
thousand and thirteen thousand feet. A shell which I believe is a Gryphæa
is the most abundant. There is also an Ostrea, Turritella, Ammonites, small
bivalve, Terebratula (?) Perhaps some good conchologist will be able to
give a guess to what grand division of the continents of Europe these organic
remains bear most resemblance. They are exceedingly imperfect and few; the
Gryphites1 are most perfect. It was late in the season, and the situation
particularly dangerous, from snow-storms. I did not dare to delay, otherwise
a good harvest might have been reaped. So much for the western line. In
the Portillo Pass, proceeding eastward, I met with an immense mass of a
conglomerate, dipping to the west 45°, which rests on micaceous sandstone, &c.
upheaved, converted into quartz rock, penetrated by dykes, from a very grand
mass of protogene (large crystals of quartz, red feldspar, and
a little chlorite.) Now this conglomerate, which reposes on and dips from
the protogene at an angle of 45°, consists of the peculiar rocks of
the first described chain, pebbles of the black rock with shells,
green sandstone, &c. &c. It is here manifest also, that
the upheaval (and deposition at least of part) of the grand eastern chain
is entirely posterior to the western. To the north, in the Uspellata pass,
we have also a fact of the same

class. Bear this in mind; it will help to make you believe what follows.
I have said the Uspellata range is geologically, although only six thousand
or seven thousand feet, a continuation of the grand eastern chain. It has
its nucleus of granite, consisting of grand beds of various crystalline
rocks, which I can feel no doubt are subaqueous lavas alternating with sandstone,
conglomerates, and white aluminous beds (like decomposed feldspar) with
many other curious varieties of sedimentary deposits. These lavas and sandstones
alternate very many times, and are quite conformable one to the other. During
two days of careful examination I said to myself at least fifty times, how
exactly like, only rather harder, these beds are to those of the upper tertiary
strata of Patagonia, Chiloe, and Concepcion, without the possibility of
their identity ever having occurred to me. At last there was no resisting
the conclusion. I could not expect shells, for they never occur in this
formation; but lignite or carbonaceous shale ought to be found. I had previously
been exceedingly puzzled by meeting in the sandstone with thin layers (a
few inches to some feet thick) of a brecciated pitchstone.1 I now strongly
suspect that the underlying granite has altered such beds into this pitchstone.
The silicified wood (particularly characteristic of the formation) was yet
absent; but the conviction that I was on the tertiary strata was so strong
in my mind by this time, that on the third day, in the midst of lavas, and
heaps of

granite, I began an apparently forlorn hunt in search of it. How do you
think I succeeded? In an escarpement of compact greenish sandstone I found
a small wood of petrified trees in a vertical position, or rather the strata
were inclined about 20° or 30° to one point, and the trees 70°
to the opposite; that is, they were before the tilt truly vertical. The
sandstone consists of many horizontal layers, and is marked by the concentric
lines of the bark (I have a specimen). Eleven are perfectly silicified,
and resemble the dicotyledonous wood which I found at Chiloe and Concepcion:
the others, thirty to thirty-four in number, I only know to be trees from
the analogy of form and position; they consist of snow-white columns (Like
Lot's wife) of coarsely crystalized carbonate of lime. The largest shaft
is seven feet. They are all close together, within one hundred yards, and
about the same level; no where else could I find any. It cannot be doubted
that the layers of fine sandstone have quietly been deposited between a
clump of trees, which were fixed by their roots. The sandstone rests on
lava, is covered by a great bed, apparently about one thousand feet thick,
of black augitic lava, and over this there are at least five grand alternations
of such rocks and aqueous sedimentary deposits; amounting in thickness to
several thousand feet. I am quite afraid of the only conclusion which I
can draw from this fact, namely, that there must have been a depression
in the surface of the land to that amount. But

neglecting this consideration, it was a most satisfactory support of my
presumption of the tertiary age of this eastern chain. (I mean by tertiary,
that the shells of the period were closely allied to, and some identical
with, those which now lie in the lower beds of Patagonia.) A great part
of the proof must remain upon my ipse dixit of a mineralogical resemblance
to those beds whose age is known. According to this view granite, which
forms peaks of a height probably of fourteen thousand feet, has been fluid
in the tertiary period: strata of that period have been altered by its heat,
and are traversed by dykes from the mass: are now inclined at high angles,
and form regular or complicated anticlinal lines. To complete this climax,
these same sedimentary strata and lavas are traversed by very numerous true
metallic veins of iron, copper, arsenic, silver, and gold, and these can
be traced to the underlying granite. A gold mine has been worked close to
the clump of silicified trees. When you see my specimens, sections, and
account, you will think there is pretty strong presumptive evidence of the
above facts. They appear very important; for the structure and size of this
chain will bear comparison with any in the world: and that all this should
have been produced in so very recent a period is indeed remarkable. In my
own mind I am quite convinced of it. I can any how most conscientiously
say, that no previously formed conjecture warped my judgment. As I have
described, so did I actually

On some of the large patches of perpetual snow, I found the famous red
snow of the arctic regions. I send with this letter my observations and
a piece of paper on which I tried to dry some specimens. . . . . . . . .
. .

. . . . . . . . . .

I also send a small bottle with two Lizards: one of them is viviparous,
as you will see by the accompanying notice. M. Gay, a French naturalist,
has already published in one of the newspapers of this country a similar
statement, and probably has forwarded to Paris some account*

* The following is an Extract from the Newspaper referred
to by Mr DARWIN:

"Besides these labours I employed myself during the
great rains in dissecting various reptiles. It must be interesting to know
the influence of the climate of Valdivia on the animals of this family.
In the greater part of those which I have been able to submit to my scalpel,
I have found a truly extraordinary fact, that they were viviparous. Not
only the innocent Snake of Valdivia has offered to my notice this singular
phenomenon, but also a beautiful and new kind of Iguana which approaches
very near to the Liposoma of Spix,1 and to which, on account of its beautiful
colours, he has given the name of Chrysosaurus. All the species, even those
which lay eggs in Santiago, here produce their young alive; and the same
thing happens with some Batrachians, and particularly with a genus near
to the Rhinella of Fitzingen,2 of which the numerous species have the skin
pleasingly spotted with green, yellow, and black. I need not dwell on the
importance of this last example, in reference to comparative anatomy: an
importance which appeared to me still greater when, on analyzing a Tadpole
not yet transformed, I satisfied myself that nature has not varied

1 Johann Baptist von Spix (1781-1826), German naturalist who travelled in Brazil. A translation of this letter appeared in elsewhere in English:
Gay, C. 1836. Extract of a letter from M. Gay to M. de Blainville, dated Valdivia, 5th July 1835, regarding the habits of leeches of Chili, and the tendency exhibited by reptiles in the same country to become viviaparous. Edinburgh New Philiosophical Journal 21: 380-381. Liposoma = Leposoma.

In the box there are two bags of seeds, one ticketed "valleys of Cordilleras
five thousand to ten thousand feet high": the soil and climate exceedingly
dry; soil light and strong; extremes in temperature: the other "chiefly
from the dry sandy traversia of Mendoza, three thousand feet, more or less."
If some of the bushes should grow, but not be healthy, try a slight sprinkling
of salt and saltpetre. The plain is saliferous. . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . .

In the Mendoza bag, there are seeds or berries of what appears to be a
small potatoe plant with a whitish flower. They grow many leagues from where
any habitation could ever have existed, owing to the absence of water. Amongst
the Chonos dried plants, you will see a fine specimen of the wild potatoe,
growing under a most opposite climate, and unquestionably a true wild potatoe.
It must be a distinct species from that of the lower Cordilleras.

her plan of organization. In these, as in the Tadpoles which
live in water, the intestines were of a length very disproportioned to the
body: now if this length were necessary to the latter, which live upon vegetable
substances, it was altogether useless to those which are to undergo their
metamorphosis in the belly of the mother: and thus nature has followed the
march prescribed to her by a uniformity of construction, and without deviating
from it, has admitted a simple exception, a real hiatus, well worthy the
attention of the philosophical naturalist."_________